US TERROR TRIBUNE

A new approach to architectural design –based on an opposition to the dominance of orthogonal and vertical forms– is used for the design of the US Terror Tribunal in New York City. This opposition is based on the outcome of the mappings/ analysis made in an earlier phase and on the argument, developed by Paul Virilio, that there is an explicit relationship between these orthogonal and vertical forms of architecture and the historical as well as structural relations between cities and terror/ war. The presence of fear plays an essential role in the design of the US Terror Tribune by blurring the boundaries/ borders between divine enchantment/ curiosity and divine fear.

The public urban landscape is based on military ideas of optical camouflage this project attempts to create an invisible architecture that uses camouflage patterns to create a disturbance in the visual field of the urban environment. The building structure itself is designed with an inherent tension, both attracting and repulsing its visitors.

MILITARIZATION OF NYC

The spatial analysis/ mapping of the militarization of New York City started with a collection of maps made during the beginning of the graduation project. These maps emphasise the typical spatial characteristics of militarized space and borders at different scale levels and the fact that militarization of space takes places at any given scale level. It’s a stealthy transformation from continuous militarized borders to more fragmented and point-based borders.

Domestic Front

Domestic Front is a theoretical essay written by Bart Nicolaas in late Dec. 2008 during his graduation research project. This essay focuses on the militarization of US cities in the shadow of the urban warfare in cities in the Middle-East. This essay is a theoretical argumentation for the necessity of the spatial research/ mappings in NYC and the architectural design for an US Terror Tribune which followed after this essay was written.

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